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John Smither: on their website it doesn't say the real tamer will accept 45[ but if it
said on the barrel that's different] is it rifled? if it is then it is a
survivor, but a regular survivor stock doesn't have the side compartments
for 4 410 shells like the tamer[ which is not to shoot 45lc as I understand
from nef] a survivor has a back compartment that's screws off﻿

John Smither: you do realize a nef[ or h&r as we say down here] tamer is a smooth bore
410 that is not made to fire 45lc's, and a survivor is a rifled 410/45lc, i
noticed you gave it both names, but the tamer cant get a 12gauge barrel,
and the survivor will, its kinda confusing if someone watches this and
doesn't realize its 2 different firearms﻿

tom fake: savage 2400 in 12/308﻿

r91976: Is this stainless steel?﻿

jstfllz: searh for izh mp 18 much more reliable and fast assemble﻿

RC monster: the gun is called the snake charmer from the 1980s and brand new it cost
100 dollars and the case was an extra 6 dollars﻿

bigdogbuc: In all seriousness, have you considered having the chamber reamed out to
fit the .460 Magnum? I'm thinking about picking one up and having it done.
That way, you can shoot the .460, .454 Casull, 45 Colt or, in a total pinch
the 45 Schofield. ﻿

d.o. niskane: This firearm (with 12-ga barrel and hollow survival stock) firing 3"
00-buck is the most intense felt recoil I have ever experienced. And I
don't give a crap about recoil. I took lead weights and filled every bit
of the fore-end and stock with them. It brought the weight up over 9 lbs
but at least I could spend a day at the range with the little monster.﻿

xXMethereaperXx: Reminds me of an old Survival .22lr i had. Everything disassembled into the
stock.﻿

Latest Comments

Fer Styles: I did not taste like drawing, drawing and much better than her best heee
goodbye﻿Jamie Shouse: Shadows are less saturated. When you pull to the right, you are increasing
the saturation while darkening the value. They compete with the mid tone
for what should be in the foreground. That's why it appears muddy. (The
technical explanation of why this works)
Saturation = how bright or grey a color is. Value = how light or dark a
color is. Hue = color. red, blue, yellow, ect.
The thing I feel you are missing is changing hue, that's what makes a piece
really pop. I've heard it called "bending" and it changed how I paint.
In general, shadows go towards purple/blue, high lights go towards yellow
(think of a circle instead of a bar). When you pull down, also move the
color slider on the side down to red, just a little for each shade darker
you go. When making a high light color, move the color bar towards yellow.
That expands the range of value you can use without using pure white and
loosing detail. Since cool colors (purple, blue, green) fall back and warm
colors (yellow, orange, red) come forward, this will also add more
dimension to your work.
This is all dependent on the lighting and all that stuff, of course. ﻿blackopsmasterism: Learn your guns you dumb ass nerd﻿stanglova86: a little more cocaine and they are good to go﻿BogoblinGamer: @T72joker It certainly is. Fingers crossed I'll have the final episode up
today, and there's 22 other morsels or project zoo goodness for ya.Rick Buddle: you sound like generalminus!!Emanuele Scarpati: *.......*﻿